Read Philippa Gregory 3-Book Tudor Collection 1 Online
Authors: Philippa Gregory
I felt myself chilled all through at this loveless analysis. But my father did not even look at me. This was business. âSo it won't be Mary. But I doubt very much if his passion for Anne will take him forward in preference to a French princess.'
My uncle thought for a moment. âWhich do we support?'
âAnne,' my mother recommended. âHe's mad for Anne. If he can rid himself of his wife this month I think he might have Anne.'
My uncle looked from my sister to me as one might choose an apple to eat. âAnne then,' he said.
Anne did not even smile. She just gave a little sigh of relief.
My uncle pushed back his chair and rose to his feet.
âWhat about me?' I asked awkwardly.
They all looked towards me as if for a moment they had forgotten I was there.
âWhat about me? Am I to go to his bed if he sends for me? Or am I to refuse?'
My uncle did not decide. That was the moment when I felt Anne's
supremacy. My uncle, the head of my family, the fount of authority in my world, looked to my sister for her decision.
âShe can't refuse,' she said. âWe don't want some slut getting into his bed and diverting him. He must keep Mary as his mistress for the nights and he'll go on falling in love with me during the day. But you must be dull, Mary, like a dull wife.'
âI don't know I can do that,' I said irritably.
Anne gave her sexy gurgle of laughter. âOh you can,' she said with a sly sideways smile at my uncle. âYou can be wonderfully dull, Mary. Don't underrate yourself.'
I saw my uncle hide a smile and I felt my cheeks burn with rage. George leaned towards me and I felt his comforting weight against my shoulder, as if to remind me that it would do me no good to protest.
Anne raised an eyebrow at my uncle and he nodded that we could leave. She led the way from the room, I followed the hem of her gown as I had always dreaded that I would have to do. I kept my eyes down as she led us out into the sunshine and walked up by the archery butts and looked out over the garden and the steeply stepped terraces down to the moat, and then the little town and the river beyond. George touched my hand with his fingers but I hardly felt him. I was consumed with rage that I had been put aside for my sister. My own family had decided that I was to be the whore and she was to be the wife.
âSo I shall be queen,' Anne said dreamily.
âI shall be brother-in-law to the King of England,' George said, as if he could hardly believe it.
âAnd what shall I be?' I spat. I would not be the king's favourite, I would not be the centre of the court. I would lose the place I had worked for ever since I was twelve years old. I would be last year's whore.
âYou'll be my lady in waiting,' Anne said sweetly. âYou'll be the other Boleyn girl.'
No-one knew how much the queen knew of the disaster which was being prepared for her. She was a queen of ice and stone in these spring days, while the cardinal trawled the universities of Europe for evidence against a wife who was completely innocent of any sin. As if to challenge the fates the queen started work on yet another new altar cloth, a match of the one she had started before; the two of them would be a massive project which would take years, and a full court of ladies in waiting, to complete. It was as if everything, even her sewing, must demonstrate to the world that she would live and die as queen of
England. How else could it be? No queen had ever been set aside before.
She had asked me to help her by blocking in the blue sky above the angels. It had been drawn for her by a Florentine artist and was very much in the new style, with luscious rounded bodies half-hidden by the angels' feathery wings, and bright expressive faces on the shepherds around the crib. It was as good as a play to look at the drawing the artist had made, the people were as vivid as if they were alive. I was glad that it would not be me who had to follow the tiny detailed lines with my needle. Long before the sky was done Wolsey would have passed sentence, the Pope confirmed it and she would be divorced and in a nunnery, and the nuns could sew the difficult draperies and the feathery wings while we Boleyns closed the trap on the bachelor king. I finished one long hank of blue silk for a tiny square of sky and took my needle to the light of the narrow window when I suddenly saw the brown head of my brother race up the steps which ran around the moat and then he was out of sight, though I craned forward to see why he was running.
âWhat is it, Lady Carey?' the queen asked from behind me, her voice absolutely expressionless.
âMy brother running in,' I said. âMay I go down and see him, Your Majesty?'
âOf course,' she said calmly. âIf there is important news you might bring it straight to me, Mary.'
I kept the needle in my hand as I left the room and hurried down the stone steps to the great hall. George had just burst in through the door.
âWhat's happened?' I asked.
âI must find Father,' he said. âThe Pope's been captured.'
âWhat?'
âWhere is Father? Where is he?'
âPerhaps with the clerks.'
At once George turned to go to their offices. I hurried after him and grabbed his sleeve but he pulled himself free. âWait, George! Captured by who?'
âBy the army of Spain,' he said. âMercenaries, in the employ of Charles of Spain, and the word is that they ran out of control, they sacked the Holy City and captured His Holiness.'
I stood stock still for a moment, shocked into silence. âThey'll let him go,' I said. âThey couldn't be so â¦' The very words failed me. George was almost hopping from one foot to another in his urgency to run onwards.
âThink!' he counselled me. âWhat does it mean if the Pope is captured by the armies of Spain? What does it mean?'
I shook my head. âThat the Holy Father is in danger,' I said feebly. âYou cannot capture the Pope â¦'
George laughed out loud. âFool!' He took me by the hand and pulled me after him, up the stairs to the offices of the clerks. He hammered on the door and put his head around it. âIs my father here?'
âWith the king,' someone replied. âIn his privy chamber.'
George spun on his heel and ran back down the stairs. I picked up the long skirt of my gown and pattered after him. âI don't understand.'
âWho can grant the king a divorce?' George demanded, pausing on the turn of the stair. He looked up at me, his brown eyes ablaze with excitement. I hesitated above him, like a defender of the circular stair.
âOnly the Pope,' I stumbled.
âWho holds the Pope?'
âCharles of Spain, you say.'
âWho is Charles of Spain's aunt?'
âThe queen.'
âSo d'you think the Pope is going to grant the king a divorce now?'
I paused. George jumped up two steps and kissed my open mouth. âSilly girl,' he said warmly. âThis is disastrous news for the king. He's never going to get free of her. It's all gone awry and we Boleyns gone awry with it.'
I snatched at his hand as he would have run away from me. âSo why are you so happy? George! If we are ruined? Why are you so merry?'
He laughed up at me. âI'm not happy, I'm maddened,' he half-shouted. âFor a moment I had started to believe our own madness. I had started to believe that Anne would be his wife and the next Queen of England. And now I am sane again. Thank God. That is why I laugh. Now let me go, I have to tell Father. I had the news from a boatman come upriver with a message for the cardinal. Father will like to know first, if I can find him.'
I let him go, in his wildness there was no holding him.
I heard his boots rattle down the stone stairs and then the bang of the opening door of the great hall, a few hasty steps across the stone floor of the hall, the yelp of a dog as he kicked it aside, and then the door creaked shut. I sank down on the stairs, where he had left me, the queen's embroidery needle still in my hand, wondering where we Boleyns were now, since all the power had shifted back to the queen again.
George had not told me whether or no I might tell the queen and I judged it safer to say nothing when I went back to her rooms. I smoothed out my face, pulled down the stomacher of my dress, and composed myself before I opened the door.
She knew already. I could tell by the way the altar cloth was flung aside and she was standing at the window, looking out, as if she could see all the way to Italy and her victorious young nephew who had promised to love and reverence her, riding in triumph into Rome. When I came in the room she shot one quick cautious glance at me and then gave a little giggle, when she saw my stunned expression.
âYou have heard the news?' she guessed.
âYes. My brother was running to my father with it.'
âIt will make a difference to everything,' she asserted. âEverything.'
âI know it.'
âAnd your sister will be in such a difficult position when she hears,' she said slyly.
An irresistible giggle escaped me. âShe called herself a storm-tossed maiden!' I said with a wail of laughter.
The queen clapped her hand to her mouth. âAnne Boleyn? Storm-tossed?'
I nodded. âGave him a jewel engraved with a maiden in a storm-tossed boat!'
The queen crammed the knuckles of her hand into her mouth. âHush! Hush!'
We heard the noise of people outside the door and in one quick movement she was back in her place, the big frame of embroidery pulled towards her, her heavy gable hood bent over her work, her face grave. She glanced at me and nodded me towards my work. I took the needle and thread that I had carried all this while, so that when the guards opened the door the queen and I were industriously stitching in silence.
It was the king himself, without companions. He came in, saw me, checked for a moment and then came on, as if he was glad to have me as a witness for what he might say to his wife of so many years.
âIt appears that your nephew has committed the most awful of crimes,' he said without preamble, his voice hard and angry.
She raised her head. âYour Majesty,' she said, and sank into a curtsey.
âI say, the most awful of crimes.'
âWhy, what has he done?'
âHis army has captured the Holy Father and imprisoned him. A blasphemous act, a sin against St Peter himself.'
A small frown creased her weary face. âI am sure he will release the Holy Father and restore him at once,' she said. âWhy would he not?'
âHe would not, because he knows that if he holds the Pope in his power then he holds all of us in his hand! He knows that we are cat's-paws! He seeks to rule us all by ruling the Pope!'
The queen's head was turned to her work again but I could not take my gaze from Henry. This was a new man, one I had not seen before. He was not angry in his usual red rage. He was coldly angry; today he had all the power of a grown man who has been a tyrant since eighteen.
âHe is a very ambitious young man,' she concurred sweetly. âAs you were at his age, I remember.'
âI did not seek to command all of Europe and destroy the plans of greater men!' he said, bitingly.
She looked up at him and smiled with her constant, pleasant confidence. âNo,' she agreed. âIt is almost as if he is divinely guided, is it not?'
My uncle ruled that we should all behave as if we were not defeated. So, as if nothing had gone wrong for us, as if the Boleyns were not overthrown, the laughter, the music and the flirtations continued in Anne's rooms. No-one called them my rooms any more, though they had once been given to me and furnished for me. Just as the queen had become a ghost, I had become a shadow. Anne had lived and bedded with me; but now she was the substance and I was the shadow. It was Anne who called for cards, and Anne who called for wine, and Anne who looked up and smiled that sleek confident smile when the king came into the room.
There was nothing I could do but take second place and smile. The king might bed me at night, but all the day he was Anne's. For the first time in all the long while that I had been his lover I felt like a whore indeed, and it was my own sister who shamed me.